"Wow! You look amazing."
"Oh, thank you. But we are going to the opera, you know."
"Right. Hey, we better hurry or we're gonna be late."
"Oh, jeez! No kidding. Let's get a move here. My mom will kill you if she misses the opening kick thingy."
Justin Reese laughed out loud. He didn't want to, but he couldn't help it. Even after three years of marriage his wife's utter lack of understanding regarding his favorite sport astounded him. Then he again, he didn't know Swan Lake from The Nutcracker and Rachel could talk ballet or opera until the cows came home. Lucky for her, so could her dad. Lucky for him, her mom was a football fanatic.
"It's about time you guys showed up!" Denise Conrad told her daughter and son-in-law. "We're gonna be late and you know I hate being late to a Seahawks game!" She grabbed her coat and gloves, picked up her purse and gave her daughter a quick hug. "You look beautiful, honey! And your father looks very dashing in his tux. You two have a great time tonight, okay?"
"You do the same, Mom. And remember, just because they serve light beer doesn't mean it won't affect you." Rachel was kidding but only partly so. The last time her mom and her husband went to a Seattle Seahawks game, she got so wasted Justin had to steady her coming up the sidewalk. In spite of her insane love of sports, she loved her mother dearly. And she was grateful to her for the genetics her mom gave her. At 48, Denise still looked a lot Rachel Welch did when she was that age. Her skin was soft and smooth and she still had no crow's feet around her eyes. Add to that her high cheekbones and soft, silky hair, Rachel knew she need not fear growing old. Other than the fact she hated all sports, the other reason she didn't care to go anywhere with her mother was getting asked who her sister was. Hopefully, in 23 more years when she was 48, she'd still look that good.
"Daddy!" Rachel exclaimed when she saw her father. "Mom said you looked handsome, but...wow! Look at you!"
He did a quick pirouette for her, bowed, and said, "You ready to go, my dear? We don't want to late, either. I can't remember being this excited about going to the opera since..."
"Since the last time we went?" Rachel teased.
Christopher Conrad was not only her father but her best friend and her hero. He'd instilled in her a deep love for the opera, ballet, the theater, and classical music from the day she was born. He'd spent his entire life performing in one form or another and done quite well at it. His influence had definitely rubbed off on his baby girl who was now 25 and a married woman. The only thing that pained him was that his son-in-law had no interest whatsoever in the finer things of life. He preferred beer to champagne, football to ballet, and Nascar to the theater. But then, so did his wife of 26 years.
Rachel knew early on her future husband had precious little interest in any of the things she most loved. It concerned her even then but it pained her now. She did her best to hide how much it bothered her, and she consoled herself by often saying that opposites attract. And boy we're they opposites! She was girly girl. She loved all those things her father raised her to love and she loved dressing up for the performances as much as the events themselves.
Justin was man's man. He was a firefighter for the City of Seattle and he loved sports of all kind. He was an outdoors kind of guy who also loved camping, hiking, mountain biking, and even hunting. Hunting. Ugh! She hated hunting. But her mother, who also loved to hunt, had taught her to respect both hunting and guns and neither she nor Justin ever killed anything they didn't eat. Even so, just the thought of killing a living thing sent chills through her. Never mind that she was not only a vegetarian but a vegan. She not only wouldn't touch anything her husband or mom ever did bring home, she wouldn't eat anything that had a face or that had a mother with a face. The thought alone made her sick.
As a devoted daddy's girl who loved the finer things in life, Rachel was wearing a formal gown with a diamond necklace and earrings and 4" heels while her husband was in jeans and Seahawks jersey, just like her mom.
"Okay, so we'll back around midnight, you two. Enjoy the opera and try not to get hurt handling those programs. Paper cuts can hurt like hell!" Denise called out as she and her son-in-law headed for the stadium.
"Daddy? Why did you marry mom when you have nothing in common?" she asked as they got ready to leave for the Seattle Center and tonight's performance of Figaro.
Her father handed her a medium-sized silver box tied with large, red ribbon. Inside was a beautiful, new, very expensive wrap. As she opened it, her eyes opened wide and she gasped sharply. "Oh, Daddy! It's beautiful!" As he put it around her shoulders he said cheerfully, "What you said isn't true, honey," he said. "Your mother and I have something in common. Something very important to both of us. We have...you!"
Rachel hugged her dad and thanked him for the expensive new gift. He extended his arm for his daughter to take and said cheerfully, "Shall we?"
Rachel laughed and said, "It wouldn't be a night out if we didn't!" Christopher Conrad dipped his head and shoulder and led them down the hall as they skipped and sang, "Oh...we're off to see the Wizard, the wonderful Wizard of Oz!"
Denise was furious. "What the hell's the matter with you? Did he hit you in the hands again, you bum?"That was the second pass the Seahawk's tight end dropped that was thrown right into his chest. "They're trying to give the damn game away!" she hissed.
Justin was too busy cussing out the receiver himself to hear what she said. Once he'd vented his spleen he put his mouth to her ear and hollered, "You want another beer, Denise?" In a rare moment of relative quiet, it was possible to hear the person next to him but it was definitely NOT quiet tonight. Seattle was one of the loudest stadiums in the NFL. In fact, the crowd was so loud it was nicknamed the 12th man meaning the crowd was worth another player for the home team.
"Yeah, sure. But this has to be the last one. I can't risk a repeat performance if you know what I mean!" she hollered at him.
As he looked around for the guy selling beer, Denise Conrad had a rare moment of melancholy. She loved going to sporting events or NASCAR races with her son-in-law, but these were things she would never share with her husband. They lived in the same house, but they lived in very different worlds. Life with Christopher was comfortable, but Denise would never in a million years call it exciting. Other than Rachel, they really had nothing in common.
Denise had been the girl every guy wanted. In high school and college, she'd been pursued by numerous good-looking jocks on campus and not a few of her male professors and other older men. And she'd dated plenty of them. But it was the quiet, cute musician and budding actor who'd won her heart. She still didn't understand why she'd fallen in love with him, but fall in love she had. He was just so...handsome. And yes, he was very talented. As she looked back, what sealed the deal was the time he put up a makeshift cover to keep the rain from hitting his violin as he stood outside her window and played some piece she didn't even know to prove how much he loved her.
For whatever reason, she'd said yes all those many years ago. Now she couldn't help but wonder what it would be like if he just had some tiny bit of interest in the things she loved. And yet, here she was again at a sporting event with her daughter's husband. And Rachel, just like her dad, couldn't appreciate just how exciting it was to watch an NFL game or see a car driving around a track at 200mph or summit Mount Rainier. Denise just didn't get it. She accepted it, but she couldn't imagine a life lived indoors.
"Here you go!" he yelled as he handed her the cup.
"To another win!" she hollered back as a toast. They sloshed their cups of beer and drank up just as the tight end held on to a pass and ran for a first down.
"Now that's what I'm talkin' about!" Denise screamed. "Go, Hawks!"
Even though Seattle was up 31-17 with two minutes to go, neither of them would ever leave early. No way. Watching the entire game was sacrosanct. Leaving early was sacrilege. Justin winced when Denise ordered her eighth beer at the two-minute warning. She chugged the rest of it as the game ended, crushed the cup and tossed it in the air. "We...kicked...ASS!" she screamed. She turned and grabbed Justin and put him a bear hug. She smelled like a brewery again, but he couldn't help but squeeze her back.
Once he got her in the car he said, "Okay, we're hittin' a Starbucks before we take you home. Coffee won't sober you up, but it'll give us another half hour to let your liver do its thing."
"Fuck my liver," she said. Denise wasn't afraid to swear, but she didn't do so gratuitously very often.
"Everything okay?" Justin asked her.